Homeschool Blogging A-Z: S is for Summer Camp

Just because it is summer, does not mean homeschooling has to end.  Summer camps should be an integral part of the homeschool plan.  By picking your child's summer camps very carefully, you can move some subjects and extra curriculars to the summer allowing your child to have an easier school year. 

Some of the cool summer camps available for homeschoolers are:

Grapic Design
Art
Theater
Computer Programming
Writing workshops
Space programs
Science Labs
Robotics
Even AP math classes can be found for older kids.

This will allow the child to concentrate on these areas of interest in the summer and perhaps give them a little break during the school year too.




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Homeschool Blogging A-Z: R is for Roles

 I have been very, very ill since Wednesday.  I suspected I was getting sick during the day as my body thermostat went haywire and my teeth kept chattering.  But around 10pm, I got hit with a fever that knocked me off my feet, followed by several days of stomach distress.  During my week of inability, and with my husband out of town, my daughter (soon to be 15) quickly stepped into the caretaker role needed to get us through the week.  The only outside help I had to call on was for grocery deliveries in a desperate attempt to ease my symptoms.

She not only assisted me, and kept my fever from getting to high, but she also checked on her brother was was also suffering, though to a lesser degree.  She made meals.  She sat nearby.  She was attentive, and I was well cared for.

Is this something I trained her for as a girl who is homeschooled.  No. Not directly.  But I believe that her numerous opportunities to watch me and other family members in action helped her step into the role she was needed for this week.  I also suspect that she has a strong maternal nature... the line between mother and daughter was very blurred this week.

I don't raise or homeschool my daughter any differently than my son, with the exception that we focus on each child's individual gifts and talents.  It was interesting however to see how my daughter will operate in a  caregiver role as an adult.

Makes me wonder if roles is something that we can teach, or something that we model, or just something ingrained in us. 



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Homeschool Blogging A-Z: Q is for Questions

As we finish our 8th grade of homeschooling and look forward to our 9th, It is interesting to reflect on all of the questions about homeschooling that have been presented to us over the year.  Like we have evolved over the years, so have the questions.  Here is a general accounting of them.

1. Why aren't the kids in school? In our early days when the kids were small children, all kind of people would sto us as we went about our day and grill me and the kids about why they were not in school.  Most seemed annoyed that children were invading their quet time at the library or supermarket at a time when they did not expect kids there.  My duaghter, who was quite tiny at the time, would pointedly say, "We don't go to school."  Then she would walk away.  Great fun!

2. What about socialization? This question came from people we knew who worried that our kids would become weird misfits.  My personal research about the subject taught me to not bother answering the question as no one would be satisfied with the answer.  So I didn't.

3.  Why don't you put the kids back in school and then volunteer at the school?  Parents of public school and private schooled kids were appalled that I would bring my kids home to educate them and give them ALL my time.  Many felt that I should be contributing to the greater good by using my strenths and knowledge in the schools and putting my kids back in classes.  I knew, however, that I only had two children and if I did not look out for their best interests first and foremost, who would?

4.  What do you use for curriculum? The tide started to turn in the mid 2000's and more and more people knew about homeschooling and were beginning to look at if favorably.  At the point people began drilling about curriculum in what seemed like and attempt to decipher if were homeschooling 'correctly'.

5. Can you homeschool my child?  When people began to realize that I did in fact know what I was doing and having positive results, I got an overwhelming amout of people asking if I would homeschool their kids while they worked.  They felt that their kids also deserved the benefits of homeschooling even if they could not or would not do it themselves.  I declined.  People were unhappy with me.

6. It's time for high school.  Shouldn't you put them back into school? As my kids began to approach high school years, we noticed that other homeschoolers were putting their kids in public schools.  We actually have some quality schools in our area.  We began to feel pressure and even got some direct demands from relatives that "enough was enough".  We'd had our homeschooling fun.  It was time for the kids to go back to school.  We polled our kids and like us, they did not agree.  We continued to homeshool.

7.  What about the prom?  By this time I was homeschooling big, strong, adult-looking homeschoolers.  People began to worry about socialization again.  Fortunately, when they asked the coded question about the prom, I was able to recite where and when all of the local homeschool proms occurred.

8.  Why did you start homeschooling in the first place? There days, people are generally curious.  This question most often comes from the parents of other homeschooling parents.  Yes, homeschooling grandparents.  It seems to me that they are trying to reconcile for themselves their own kids homeschooling journey and are looking for comparison points.

9.  How do I start homeschooling? This past year, I have been pleasantly surprised by the vast number of new homeschoolers who have approached me looking for help.  It appears that we are having a resurgence of homeschooling.  This is going to get interesting.



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Homeschool Blogging A-Z: P is for Pajamas

It's True.  Homeschoolers don't bother to get dressed until it is time to leave the house.  We literally spend the day in our pajamas... sort of.  Actually, my son prefers sweat pants.  I like yoga pants and t-shirts, and my daughter lives in scrubs.

The scrubs she wears are the same medical scrubs you find on a doctor or nurse at the hospital. They are no-muss, no-fuss, wash and wear, and they are also great for sleepovers, and tech week wear, when you have spend every single minute at drama club rehearsal getting in and out of costumes. 

I keep her closet stocked with these easy wear, easy care outfits by ordering them from stores like http://www.blueskyscrubs.com/categories/Scrubs/ where they also carry the long sleeve t-shirts that I love so much. 

Homeschool Blogging A-Z: O is for Online Classes

(Has anyone figured out how much of a Dork I am yet?)  In my a to Z blog project I listed M, then N, them M again!)...  I am going to pick up now with O... forgive my scattered brain!

Homeschool blogging A-Z:  O is for Online Learning

Over the years, we have approached learning is a great mixture of ways.  We have taken classes in the community, used online programs and educational websites, and we have also studied from textbooks at home.  One option we haven't had the opportunity to explore, but is still a great option is online learning through online classes.

Online classes including online college courses are classes run by a teacher who communicates through the internet through video programs and message boards.  The teacher and student may communicate live; in real time, or they may leave messages and video instruction for the other to retrieve later. 

MIT online learning and other Open Source type classes are one form of online learning.  The student can follow the lectures and classwork given by an actual professor at a top college. 
My daughter plans to take a food chemistry class next fall using this method of learning.

Spanish for Sophie


The following guest post introduces an interesting approach to learning Spanish: 

 Authored by Leandro Delgado

I wanted to teach my daughter a second language, Spanish, so that she could communicate with my side of the family, which was from Mexico. She is only four and it definitely makes sense to teach her now while she’s so absorbent so I signed us up for clear wireless internet so we could start taking Spanish tutorials together online. She has a private tutor who speaks with her via webcam once a week and the other days she does lessons on her own, usually in some type of game or cartoon which she finds really fun and stimulating. She’s picking Spanish up so quickly, I can’t believe it, and pretty soon she&r! squo;ll be speaking it better than I do! She can already pronounce many of the vocabulary words from items in our home and she’s loving the online tutor. He’s in Mexico and we’ve all agreed to meet up the next time I go home to visit my family, which should be lots of fun. I’m glad I started her young and hopefully she’ll thank me!

Homeschool Blogging A-Z: M is for Money

Whether your child is in public school, private school, or homeschool, they will encounter Algebra, Geometry, Trig, and/or calculus.  In learning all of that math, let us not forget the most important math of all.  Money.

A child should learn how to count money, multiply and divide money, determine cost per unit, and much more.  Let's not forget to learn about banking, interest, credit, and investments too. 

I am only pointing it out because I almost neglected to teach financial math myself.  My kid had to ask for it.  Don't send them out into the world unprepared.


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12 grade year of homeschooling, Finishing Strong

We are almost done with my college prep series. There will still be a video on completing the transcript.    Stay tuned... meanwhile, ...